differences between Student version and the Commercial
Anonymous
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‎2006-03-30 05:07 AM
‎2006-03-30
05:07 AM
In reference to my example, I had the opportunity to learn the ChiefArchiect software a year ago at work. That software seems to function in many of the same ways as ArchiCad (as far as the end user is concerned). In Chief I could place items exactly where I wanted them, using distances, or coordinates (i did not often use coordinates). It made working with it really quick, because you place an item where you wanted it and move on to the next thing. So far I am not happy with the move functions in ArchiCad or the dimension functions either. Maybe I need to keep working with them.
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‎2006-03-30 05:20 AM
‎2006-03-30
05:20 AM
I used the student version of ArchiCAD 9.0 before using the full version currently and as far as I can tell the only difference is that there is a watermark in the plotmaker files when you export to PDF or print directly. Also, you cannot export to .DWG and you cannot open student version files in the commercial version of the application. I dont know any other differences than that, but then I only used the student version for about 6 months.
RA 2012 x64, Piranesi 6 Pro, Sketchup 8, Windows 7 Pro x64, Intel Core i7, 10GB RAM, ATI Radeon Mobile 5870
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‎2006-03-30 05:24 AM
‎2006-03-30
05:24 AM
Chadwick wrote:Those are it.
I used the student version of ArchiCAD 9.0 before using the full version currently and as far as I can tell the only difference is that there is a watermark in the plotmaker files when you export to PDF or print directly. Also, you cannot export to .DWG and you cannot open student version files in the commercial version of the application. I dont know any other differences than that, but then I only used the student version for about 6 months.
Eduardo RolĂłn AIA NCARB
AC28 US/INT -> AC08
AC28 US/INT -> AC08
Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
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‎2006-03-30 07:29 AM
‎2006-03-30
07:29 AM
StP
With regard to your example of moving an item a certain distance, you most certainly can. And you can move something to a point relative to something else in one easy step too.
A couple of metric examples....
Basic move: Select an object (or line, wall, whatever you want to move), Edit (or right click) "drag", pick your first reference point, use SHIFT to constrain mouse in appropriate direction, with SHIFT still down type "r" (you can the release SHIFT) input your distance into R co-ordinates, then hit ENTER. job done.
Relative move: Select an object, "drag" command, select your starting point, move your cursor to a reference point, when cursor is a tick type "x" then input "600+" (note that + must be from numeric keypad, - can be from normal keys)" then ENTER and your object will be placed at a point 600mm to the right of your reference point, (or to the left if you say "600-").
Accuracy is very easy to achieve. Have a read of some of the help files.
HTH
With regard to your example of moving an item a certain distance, you most certainly can. And you can move something to a point relative to something else in one easy step too.
A couple of metric examples....
Basic move: Select an object (or line, wall, whatever you want to move), Edit (or right click) "drag", pick your first reference point, use SHIFT to constrain mouse in appropriate direction, with SHIFT still down type "r" (you can the release SHIFT) input your distance into R co-ordinates, then hit ENTER. job done.
Relative move: Select an object, "drag" command, select your starting point, move your cursor to a reference point, when cursor is a tick type "x" then input "600+" (note that + must be from numeric keypad, - can be from normal keys)" then ENTER and your object will be placed at a point 600mm to the right of your reference point, (or to the left if you say "600-").
Accuracy is very easy to achieve. Have a read of some of the help files.
HTH
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‎2006-03-30 09:09 AM
‎2006-03-30
09:09 AM
The differences are country-dependent...
In Belgium there is no difference between a student and a full-version, apart from Price and license-agreement. You even get the full manuals and dongle.
Good attitude towards students, certainly when all Autodesk student prices have dropped grouped prices (they used to be cheaper when you bought 20+ licenses).
In Belgium there is no difference between a student and a full-version, apart from Price and license-agreement. You even get the full manuals and dongle.
Good attitude towards students, certainly when all Autodesk student prices have dropped grouped prices (they used to be cheaper when you bought 20+ licenses).
--- stefan boeykens --- bim-expert-architect-engineer-musician ---
Archicad28/Revit2024/Rhino8/Solibri/Zoom
MBP2023:14"M2MAX/Sequoia+Win11
Archicad-user since 1998
my Archicad Book
Archicad28/Revit2024/Rhino8/Solibri/Zoom
MBP2023:14"M2MAX/Sequoia+Win11
Archicad-user since 1998
my Archicad Book